So, in a few short months I have passed over 850 unique visitors and 8000 page views! Pretty good I think. To commemorate I now have a working script that checks my spelling for me so you no longer have to endure my laziness in proofreading my entries. :) (Thank you must go to Mike for his constant tech support!)

My last entry was on politics and how I believed the education system should be more proactive in teaching students about current events and world issues. A recent observance at my work place has prompted me to have this entry. At my weekly engineering meeting the environmental co-op did a brief advertisement for a now passed fund raising event (which I attended and was quite pleased with it). The charity was Engineers Without Borders (Founded by Waterloo Grads!), an organization that works with “developing communities around the world” to help “them gain access to the technologies they need to improve their lives.” A very worthy charity in my mind, and one I support. There are many that I don’t support though, and for good reasons. After the presentation, the student offered the sale of white Make Poverty History wristbands. Not surprisingly, a few people bought them, including one ignorant student. On questioning this student about the meaning of the band, he shook off the question and just went to say something along the lines of “oh well, these days they are fashion statements.” So now I have to declare that I hate wristbands and will challenge people who wear them.

“Fashion statement”? How can an ugly bulky silicone wristband be a fashion statement? Well, I say that it could easily be one with a few currently fashionable traits. Intelligence and being well informed (Note: Activism isn’t fashionable in my mind!) are very fashionable. To be in the know and be able to impress people with your grasp of the world is fashionable. Isn’t that what these wristbands (link on them from BBC) imply? That you have knowledge of current events, have opinions, and are showing everyone else that fact? Well, that would be the case if peoplewere informed of the issues. I’ve met too many people who aren’t informed, and wearing these wrist bands imply education that doesn’t exist. What I’d like to see is the people make their own opinions after being given all of the facts about the issue the wristband represents and what the organization sponsoring it campaigns for. For me, there is very few wristbands I’d ever consider wearing. One being the Live Wrong wristband…just to show my disgust with so many wristband wearers.

So, why don’t I make a case against the most popular one, the Make Poverty History band that inspired this entry. Their overall goal is raise awareness of poverty and pressure governments to take action, especially in dealing with developing countries. A worthy goal it would seem, until you examine the details and see how absurd some of their goals are. Well, first I must say a few policies are acceptable to me, such as debt relief to developing countries . The fact is, our government (Canada) and many others have already done this. Yet they continue to campaign. Their main goal: To get governments to commit to 0.7% of their GDP toward foreign aid . Don’t sound like much, eh? In Canada, that would be over $7 billion per year, put in comparison with the about $4 billion per year health care budget. Their website doesn’t give you those details does it? Canada cannot afford to give that high of a level of aid (if I recall, though can’t find a link, it’s around 2 billion now). Hence the reason Paul Martin took the stance against the pressure, and told the international community Canada will give what we are able to give, and will strive to eventually give that amount, but will not guarantee it. He increased aid this year, but has a sense of balance. We can’t save the world when we struggle at home. Think about Canadian poverty levels. Do you not think our government should deal with them before tramping around the world saving others when we can’t save our self? Of course not, it just doesn’t make sense.

Furthermore, the charity stands for awareness, which is a noble cause in my mind. But how do they go about it? By making a international musical event called Live 8 organized by a has been musician (read: Bob Geldof) that costs multi millions of dollars to produce with annoying celebrities talking about poverty their fortunes will prevent them from ever experiencing. I can’t even make a sarcastic comment here; it just doesn’t do it for me. Live 8, to everyone I talked to was just a big concert on TV, like SARSfest. Very few people learned the details I provided above. I think that makes it a failure. And what was with the banning charities from canvassing at it? Your charity is better than all the others including food drives for the Barrie area? Bullshit. Canada is doing exactly what we should, supporting causes in moderation, only what we can commit, and paying down our federal debt (which will give us future money on saved interest) unlike the US who’s public debt is now over $8 trillion (!) at $8,010,059,396,713.96. Not something to be proud of if you’re an American. Or the recent milestone the US military reached of 2000 Americans dead in Iraq…but all the deaths and massive debt is for the greater good! Isn’t it?…

Well, now I got that off my mind. I’ll have to think of something more positive for the next one. That will be hard…

Random Wikipedia Article: Saint-Pierre and Miquelon
Currently Listening to: Sugar, We’re Goin’ Down - Fall Out Boy